US, Ukraine sign economic deal after Trump presses Kyiv to pay back US for help in repelling Russia

US, Ukraine sign economic deal after Trump presses Kyiv to pay back US for help in repelling Russia
Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky (R) meets with US President Donald Trump (L) on the sidelines of Pope Francis's funeral at St. Peter's Basilica at the Vatican on April 26, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 01 May 2025

US, Ukraine sign economic deal after Trump presses Kyiv to pay back US for help in repelling Russia

US, Ukraine sign economic deal after Trump presses Kyiv to pay back US for help in repelling Russia
  • Announcement comes at a critical moment in the Russia-Ukraine war

WASHINGTON: The US and Ukraine announced on Wednesday an economic agreement after a weekslong press by President Donald Trump on Ukraine to compensate Washington for billions in military and economic assistance to help Ukraine repel the Russian invasion.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said in a video posted to X that “this partnership allows the United States to invest alongside Ukraine, to unlock Ukraine’s growth assets, mobilize American talent, capital and governance standards that will improve Ukraine’s investment climate and accelerate Ukraine’s economic recovery.”
The announcement comes at a critical moment in the war as Trump has grown increasingly frustrated with leaders of Russia and Ukraine with the brutal fighting dragging on.
The American president has criticized his Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, for steps that he said were prolonging the killing, and he has rebuked Russian President Vladimir Putin for complicating negotiations with “very bad timing” in launching deadly strikes on Kyiv.
Trump on Saturday met with Zelensky on the sidelines of Pope Francis’ funeral.
Ukraine’s Economy Minister Yulia Svyrydenko in a post on X celebrated the breakthrough.
“Together with the United States, we are creating the Fund that will attract global investment to our country,” she said.
The two sides offered only barebone details about the structure of the deal, but it is expected to give the US access to its valuable rare minerals in the hopes of ensuring continued American support for Kyiv in its grinding war with Russia.

Ukraine’s economy minister and deputy prime minister, Yulia Svyrydenko, flew to Washington on Wednesday to help finalize the deal, Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal said during an appearance on Ukrainian television. Although the main part of the agreement had been settled, there were still hurdles to overcome, said a senior Ukrainian official who spoke on condition of anonymity because the official wasn’t authorized to discuss the matter publicly.
For Ukraine, the agreement is seen as key to ensuring its access to future US military aid.
“Truly, this is a strategic deal for the creation of an investment partner fund,” Shmyhal said. “This is truly an equal and good international deal on joint investment in the development and restoration of Ukraine between the governments of the United States and Ukraine.”
Trump began his push for a deal in February that he wanted access to Ukraine’s rare earth materials as a condition for continued US support in the war, describing it as reimbursement for the billions of dollars in aid the US has given to Kyiv.
But talks stalled after a tense Oval Office meeting of US and Ukrainian leaders, and reaching an agreement since then has proven difficult and strained relations between Washington and Kyiv.
Negotiations appeared to drag on till shortly before the two sides confirmed an agreement had been signed off on the deal.
Earlier Wednesday, Bessent said during a Cabinet meeting at the White House — hours after Ukrainian officials indicated a deal was nearly finalized — that there was still work to do.
“The Ukrainians decided last night to make some last-minute changes,” Bessent said when asked about reports that Ukraine was ready to agree to the pact. “We’re sure that they will reconsider that. And we are ready to sign this afternoon if they are.”
He didn’t elaborate as to the late changes he said Ukraine made.
The US has been seeking access to more than 20 raw materials deemed strategically critical to its interests, including some non-minerals such as oil and natural gas. Among them are Ukraine’s deposits of titanium, which is used for making aircraft wings and other aerospace manufacturing, and uranium, which is used for nuclear power, medical equipment and weapons. Ukraine also has lithium, graphite and manganese, which are used in electric vehicle batteries.
After Kyiv felt the initial US draft of the deal disproportionately favored American interests, it introduced new provisions aimed at addressing those concerns.
According to Shmyhal, the latest version would establish an equal partnership between the two countries and last for 10 years. Financial contributions to a joint fund would be made in cash, and only new US military aid would count toward the American share. Assistance provided before the agreement was signed would not be counted. Unlike an earlier draft, the deal would not conflict with Ukraine’s path toward European Union membership — a key provision for Kyiv.
The Ukrainian Cabinet approved the agreement Wednesday, empowering Svyrydenko to sign it in Washington. Once signed by both sides, the deal would need to be ratified by the Ukrainian Parliament before it could take effect.
Putin wants answers before committing to a ceasefire
The negotiations come amid rocky progress in Washington’s push to stop the war.
Putin backs calls for a ceasefire before peace negotiations, “but before it’s done, it’s necessary to answer a few questions and sort out a few nuances,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said. Putin is also ready for direct talks with Ukraine without preconditions to seek a peace deal, he added.
“We realize that Washington wants to achieve quick progress, but we hope for understanding that the Ukrainian crisis settlement is far too complex to be done quickly,” Peskov said during his daily conference call with reporters.
Trump has expressed frustration over the slow pace of progress in negotiations aimed at stopping the war. Western European leaders have accused Putin of stalling while his forces seek to grab more Ukrainian land. Russia has captured nearly a fifth of Ukraine’s territory since Moscow’s forces launched a full-scale invasion on Feb. 24, 2022.
Trump has long dismissed the war as a waste of lives and American taxpayer money — a complaint he repeated Wednesday during his Cabinet meeting. That could spell an end to crucial military help for Ukraine and heavier economic sanctions on Russia.
US wants both sides to speed things up
The US State Department on Tuesday tried again to push both sides to move more quickly and warned that the US could pull out of the negotiations if there’s no progress.
“We are now at a time where concrete proposals need to be delivered by the two parties on how to end this conflict,” department spokeswoman Tammy Bruce quoted US Secretary of State Marco Rubio as telling her.
Russia has effectively rejected a US proposal for an immediate and full 30-day ceasefire, making it conditional on a halt to Ukraine’s mobilization effort and Western arms supplies to Kyiv.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov claimed Wednesday that Ukraine had accepted an unconditional truce only because it was being pushed back on the battlefield, where the bigger Russian forces have the upper hand.
UN says Ukrainian civilian casualties are on the rise
Meanwhile, Ukrainian civilians have been killed or wounded in attacks every day this year, according to a UN report presented Tuesday in New York.
The UN Human Rights Office said in the report that in the first three months of this year, it had verified 2,641 civilian casualties in Ukraine. That was almost 900 more than during the same period last year.
Also, between April 1-24, civilian casualties in Ukraine were up 46 percent from the same weeks in 2024, it said.
The daily grind of the war shows no sign of letting up. A nighttime Russian drone attack on Ukraine’s second-largest city, Kharkiv, wounded at least 45 civilians, Ukrainian officials said.
Also Wednesday, the Ukrainian Security Service claimed its drones struck the Murom Instrument Engineering Plant in Russia’s Vladimir region overnight, causing five explosions and a fire at the military facility. The claim could not be independently verified.


Philippines death toll rises to 11 as storm Bualoi bears down on Vietnam

Philippines death toll rises to 11 as storm Bualoi bears down on Vietnam
Updated 27 September 2025

Philippines death toll rises to 11 as storm Bualoi bears down on Vietnam

Philippines death toll rises to 11 as storm Bualoi bears down on Vietnam
  • The Philippines is hit by an average of 20 storms and typhoons each year, routinely striking disaster-prone areas where millions of people live in poverty

MANILA: The death toll from Severe Tropical Storm Bualoi rose to 11 in the Philippines on Saturday as the cyclone bore down on Vietnam, authorities said.

Bualoi battered small islands in the center of the Philippines on Friday, toppling trees and power pylons, ripping roofs off homes, unleashing floods and forcing 400,000 people to evacuate.

Among the worst hit was the tiny island of Biliran, where eight people died and two are missing, provincial disaster official Noel Lungay said.

“There was widespread flooding and some roads remained under water,” he said.

“Evacuees are starting to return to their homes as the weather improves,” he added.

The office of civil defense in Manila earlier reported three other deaths on the nearby islands of Masbate and Ticao, including two people crushed by a tree and a wall that were brought down by the strong winds.

Fourteen people remain missing across the central Philippines, it said without providing details, while more than 200,000 remained inside evacuation centers across the storm’s path.

Bualoi came on the heels of Super Typhoon Ragasa which killed 14 people across the northern Philippines.

Bualoi was tearing across the South China Sea on Saturday at typhoon strength of 120 kilometers an hour, the Philippines’ state weather service said.

It was forecast to be off the coast of central Vietnam by Sunday afternoon.

The Philippines is hit by an average of 20 storms and typhoons each year, routinely striking disaster-prone areas where millions of people live in poverty.

Scientists warn that storms are becoming more powerful as the world warms due to the effects of human-driven climate change.

The storms come as the Philippine public seethes over a scandal involving bogus flood-control projects believed to have cost taxpayers billions of dollars.

Thousands took to the streets on Sunday to vent their anger, with the peaceful demonstrations later overshadowed by street battles that saw police vehicles set ablaze, and the windows of a precinct headquarters shattered.


S. Africa protesters demand govt sever ties with Israel

S. Africa protesters demand govt sever ties with Israel
Updated 27 September 2025

S. Africa protesters demand govt sever ties with Israel

S. Africa protesters demand govt sever ties with Israel
  • Demonstration in Cape Town brings together several pro-Palestinian organizations, political parties, religious

CAPE TOWN: More than 3,000 people marched through Cape Town on Saturday, calling for South Africa to cut trade and diplomatic ties with Israel, including by shutting its embassy, over the war in Gaza.

Pretoria has been a leading critic of Israel’s actions in Gaza, bringing a case before the UN’s top court in December 2023 that argues Israel’s war in the Palestinian territory amounts to genocide, a charge Israel has denied.
Saturday’s demonstration brought together several pro-Palestinian organizations, political parties, and Muslim and Christian groups, marking one of the largest such turnouts in months.

The government has to take action on the kicking out of Israel’s ambassador and embassy from South Africa now.

Usuf Chikte, Campaign coordinator

Waving Palestinian flags and slogans such as “Don’t just feel bad, do something,” the procession handed over a petition of demands at parliament.
South Africa must “boycott, divest and sanction Israel, the same way as the world did for us,” said Palestine Solidarity Campaign coordinator, Usuf Chikte, referring to international measures used to pressure South Africa’s apartheid regime.
The government has to take action on the “kicking out of Israel’s ambassador and embassy from South Africa now,” and the country should be excluded from international sporting bodies such as FIFA, he told the crowd.
The petition also demanded that the government suspend its exports of coal to Israel and prosecute any South Africans who enlist in the Israeli military.
The war in Gaza broke out after militants attacked Israel on Oct. 7, 2023. Israel’s retaliatory military offensive has since killed at least 65,926 people.
Hamas said a mass walkout of delegations before Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s speech at the UN showed Israel’s “isolation” as a result of the Gaza war.
“Boycotting Netanyahu’s speech is one manifestation of Israel’s isolation and the consequences of the war of extermination,” Taher Al-Nunu, the media adviser to the head of Hamas’s political bureau, said in a statement.

 


Palestine Action prisoners say they face restrictions after group’s ban

Palestine Action prisoners say they face restrictions after group’s ban
Updated 27 September 2025

Palestine Action prisoners say they face restrictions after group’s ban

Palestine Action prisoners say they face restrictions after group’s ban
  • Those held on remand say they have been banned from wearing the keffiyeh

LONDON: Prisoners awaiting trial for alleged offenses linked to Palestine Action claim they have faced new restrictions since the group was proscribed earlier this year in the UK, a report in .

Those held on remand say they have been banned from wearing the keffiyeh, prevented from taking certain prison jobs, and in some cases had personal contacts removed from their call lists.

The restrictions have been applied despite the fact that none of the prisoners have been charged under terrorism legislation.

The UK’s Crown Prosecution Service has said, however, that their cases carry a “terrorism connection.”

Palestine Action, which has targeted sites of the Israeli arms manufacturer Elbit Systems in the UK, was banned in July under the Terrorism Act.

The government said the decision was based on intelligence assessments, including one that cited “the use or threat of action involving serious damage to property.”

Teuta Hoxha, who is charged with criminal damage, aggravated burglary and violent disorder in relation to an action at Elbit Systems in Filton, near Bristol, said she was removed from her prison library job at HMP Peterborough following the proscription.

In a letter she received, the prison’s head of female services wrote: “In July 2025, the home secretary proscribed Palestine Action as a terrorist organisation under the Terrorism Act 2000. The offences you are held on remand for are linked to Palestine Action and impact roles that are considered appropriate for you. The library orderly role is not considered appropriate.”

Hoxha, who recently staged a four-week hunger strike, said she also had a scarf she had knitted in the colours of the Palestinian flag confiscated.

She added that her sister had been taken off her call list because of her political views, after she and two other inmates connected to the Filton protest were categorized as terrorists by a joint extremism unit.

Audrey Corno, who is on bail awaiting two trials for alleged Palestine Action protests before the proscription, said: “She (Hoxha) was arrested in November 2024, way before proscription, so it’s completely banal for them to apply this retrospectively, and it’s completely punitive the way that they’re using this.”

Another defendant, Zoe Rogers, awaiting trial in the same case, said she was told a keffiyeh sent to her at HMP Bronzefield had been withheld “because it features branding associated with the Palestine Action Group.”

Supporters of Palestine Action say measures are being applied unfairly and retrospectively.

Sodexo, which runs HMP Peterborough, said it did not comment on individual cases but added: “We take our duty to ensure the safety of our prisons very seriously and will always act in line with national security guidance.”

Meanwhile, a spokesperson for the Ministry of Justice added that all prisoners were subject to the same rules, saying: “Flags, symbols and other items that might threaten safety, order or security can be confiscated.”


18 dead, dozens missing in Nigeria mine collapse: local sources

18 dead, dozens missing in Nigeria mine collapse: local sources
Updated 27 September 2025

18 dead, dozens missing in Nigeria mine collapse: local sources

18 dead, dozens missing in Nigeria mine collapse: local sources
  • “We have managed to pull out 18 dead bodies from the pit,” Lawwali said
  • A dozen other miners were still trapped inside

GUSAU, Nigeria: Rescuers in Nigeria are searching for dozens of people missing after a boulder crashed onto an illegal mine during heavy rains, killing at least 18 people, local sources told AFP on Saturday.
The rock came crashing down on Thursday on the mine in the northern Zamfara state outside the Kadauri village in the Maru district, they said.
“We have managed to pull out 18 dead bodies from the pit and five other survivors who sustained various degrees of injuries,” Sani Lawwali, a miner who works in unauthorized pits, said from Kadauri.
A dozen other miners were still trapped inside and their fate remained unknown, said Lawwali, who took part in the rescue effort.
“The process is slow and laborious as we use our bare hands to chisel the end of the boulder to make holes for limited access into the pit,” he said.
Rescuers have asked for a bulldozer being used at a nearby road construction site to be brought in to help, but had not yet received a response from the company using it, Lawwali added.
Abubakar Nabube, a local community leader, confirmed the death toll of 18. He said that 15 of those killed came from the nearby Maikwanugga and Damaga villages.
“If no help comes from emergency agencies soon, none of those trapped would come out alive,” he said.
Zayyanu Ibrahim, a resident of Kadauri village said the collapse occurred at one of several newly dug sites in the recently established mining site.
“Dozens of miners were working in the pit while it heavily rained outside. A huge boulder at the mouth of the pit collapsed and buried miners inside,” said Ibrahim, who also confirmed the toll.
Sani Abdullahi, a councillor in the area, said it was difficult to say how many people there were in the pit at the time of the accident.
Officials from the Nigerian emergency agency NEMA did not respond to an AFP enquiry about the accident.
Zamfara, a poor agrarian state, is rich in gold deposits where illegal artisanal mining thrives in the countryside, despite several attempts by authorities to stop the practice.
The authorities have blamed illegal mining for the worsening of bandit violence, with criminal gangs getting money from protection fees they extort from miners.


Russian foreign minister: Any aggression against our country will be met with a ‘decisive response’

Russian foreign minister: Any aggression against our country will be met with a ‘decisive response’
Updated 27 September 2025

Russian foreign minister: Any aggression against our country will be met with a ‘decisive response’

Russian foreign minister: Any aggression against our country will be met with a ‘decisive response’
  • “Russia has never had and does not have any such intentions” of attacking European or NATO countries, Lavrov said
  • “Russia and the US bear a special responsibility for the state of affairs in the world, and for avoiding risks that could plunge humanity into a new war”

UNITED NATIONS: As new tensions rise between Russia and NATO powers, Moscow’s top diplomat insisted to world leaders Saturday that his nation doesn’t intend to attack Europe but will mount a “decisive response” to any aggression.
Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov spoke at the UN General Assembly after weeks in which unauthorized flights into NATO’s airspace — intrusions the alliance blames on Russia — have raised alarm around Europe, particularly after NATO jets downed drones over Poland and Estonia said Russian fighter jets flew into its territory and lingered for 12 minutes.
Russia has denied that its planes entered Estonian airspace and has said the drones didn’t target Poland, with Moscow’s ally Belarus maintaining that Ukrainian signal-jamming sent the devices off course.
But European leaders see the incidents as intentional, provocative moves meant to rattle NATO and to suss how the alliance will respond. The alliance warned Russia this week that NATO would use all means to defend against any further breaches of its airspace.
At the UN, Lavrov maintained it’s Russia that’s facing threats.
“Russia has never had and does not have any such intentions” of attacking European or NATO countries, he said. “However, any aggression against my country will be met with a decisive response. There should be no doubt about this among those in NATO and the EU.”
Speaking three years into the Ukraine war
Lavrov spoke three years into Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, a war that the international community has broadly deplored.
US President Donald Trump said this week that he believed Ukraine can win back all the territory it has lost to Russia. It was a notable tone shift from a US leader who had previously suggested Ukraine would need to make some concessions and could never reclaim all the areas Russia has occupied since seizing the Crimean Peninsula in 2014 and launching a full-scale invasion in 2022.
Just three weeks earlier, Russian President Vladimir Putin said his country and the US had a “mutual understanding” and that Trump’s administration “is listening to us.” Trump and Putin held a summit in Alaska in early August but left without a deal to end the war.
Sounding a notably open note from a country that has often lambasted the West, Lavrov noted the summit and said Russia had “some hopes” to keep talking with the United States.
“In the approaches of the current US administration, we see a desire not only to contribute to ways to realistically resolve the Ukrainian crisis, but also a desire to develop pragmatic cooperation without adopting an ideological stance,” the diplomat said, portraying the powers as counterparts of sorts: “Russia and the US bear a special responsibility for the state of affairs in the world, and for avoiding risks that could plunge humanity into a new war.”
To be sure, Lavrov still had sharp words for NATO, an alliance that includes the US, and for the West in general and the European Union.
Trump’s emerging view of Ukraine is part of the equation
Trump’s new view of Ukraine’s prospects came after he met with its president, Volodymyr Zelensky, on the sidelines of General Assembly on Tuesday — seven months after a televised blow-up between the two in the Oval Office. This time, the doors were closed, and the tenor was evidently different — “a good meeting,” as Zelensky described it in his assembly speech the next day.
For the fourth year in a row, Zelensky appealed to the gathering of presidents, prime ministers and other top officials to get Russia out of his country — and warned that inaction would put other countries at risk.
“Ukraine is only the first,” he said.
Russia has offered various explanations for the Ukraine war, among them ensuring Russia’s its own security after NATO expanded eastward over the years and drew closer with Ukraine after Russia’s move into Crimea. Russia also has said its offensive was meant to protect Russian speakers in eastern Ukraine.
Ukraine and the West have denounced Russia’s invasion as an unprovoked act of aggression.
Addressing the devastating war in Gaza, Lavrov condemned Hamas militants’ surprise attack in southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, but said “there is no justification” for Israel’s killing of Palestinian civilians, including children.
The Hamas attack killed about 1,200 people in Israel; 251 were taken hostage. Israel’s sweeping offensive has killed more than 65,000 Palestinians in Gaza, according to the Gaza Health Ministry. It does not give a breakdown of civilian and combatant deaths but says around half of those killed were women and children.
Lavrov also said there is no basis for any potential Israeli annexation of the West Bank, which Palestinians consider a key part of their future state, along with Gaza and east Jerusalem.
Israel hasn’t announced such a move, but several leading members in Netanyahu’s government have advocated doing so. Officials recently approved a controversial settlement project that would effectively cut the West Bank in two, a move critics say could doom chances for a Palestinian state.
Between the Gaza war and the situation in the West Bank, “we are essentially dealing with an attempt at a kind of coup d’etat aimed at burying UN decisions on the creation of a Palestinian state,” Lavrov said.
The international community has long embraced a “two-state solution” to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. But Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu rejects the idea of a Palestinian state, saying it would reward Hamas — a position he reiterated Friday at the General Assembly.